Page:Poems, Volume 2, Coates, 1916.djvu/78

62 One dear refrain repeating o'er and o'er:—

Tristram returns no more—

Tristram returns, returns—ah, never more!"

Ashen the fire,—

Ashen: like dead desire.

The dawn breaks chill,

The children, sleeping, think their father here.

O Tristram! might I, also, dream you near!—

Mine—mine without regret!

As when I nursed your wound, and taught you to forget

The cruel torment of your love for her,—

The poisoned wine, the still avenging hate,

The ship, the pain, the unrepenting Fate,

The yearning that is death, yet doth not kill!

(Sleep, little ones! your mother guards you still.)

They are at rest,

Their sorrows over.

Forgetful of the tortured past,

They are at rest at last,

Sad lover by sad lover.

Oh, drear to me

The voices of the sea-birds, and the sea—